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'Compassionate Use' and the Law on Unapproved COVID-19 Drugs

'Compassionate Use' and the Law on Unapproved COVID-19 Drugs ► for more legal explainers and interviews with the titans of law.

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TRANSCRIPT

You may have heard a lot in the news about the president and others talking about drugs they think might be helpful or could help or might work for people who are in crisis due to the COVID pandemic. "Well, there was this great drug I'm hearing about, that there's not a lot of evidence for, there's no clinical trials, but I think it'll work wonders. I have a feeling or whatever." I want to talk a little about the law that governs the use of those druge. My name is Glenn Cohen, I'm a professor at Harvard Law School and I'm an expert at the intersection of law and medicine.

Now first off, I want to remind you there's a lot of risks involved in taking a drug that has not been cleared by FDA or by others for a particular use. There's even greater risk that people might hear these messages and really become confused. There' s a tragic story of somebody who consumed a form of a drug used for fish in a koi pond and then ended up dead, essentially because of this. So we want to just be very careful about our health in these instances. But you might legitimately wonder what's the law on this. So FDA, the Food and Drug Administration, has the primary authority in approving drugs in this country. It reviews three phases of clinical trials aimed at showing that the drug is safe and efficacious and has a reasonable side effect as to a particular indication and a particular use. The long process is expensive and many drugs don't make it out of this process, to be honest, but it is a process that is time tested and honored in this country.

Nonetheless, FDA realizes that there are instances where people need something quicker, their are lives are at risk, they are terminally ill, for example, and it has a process called "expanded access," where for an individual, for a small group of people, or even widespread use, it can approve a use of a drug that has not go through these three phases of approval already. There is also, in many states now in the federal government, an even more capacious way of getting access to these drugs called "right try laws." They shift the onus and regulatory burden from FDA largely to doctors and the states instead.

Okay well beyond unapproved drugs, there are also drugs that have been approved for a particular use that someone wants to use them for a different use. Does FDA control that? Short answer: no. FDA has said, "That's the practice of medicine, we don't do the practice of medicine. So you as a doctor, if you want to use a drug that has been approved for usage for X and you want to use it for Y, you may do so and FDA can't say you are violating the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Instead, you may face some tort liability if you do, but you're allowed to do that as a physician as part of the practice of medicine.

What happens if a drug company tries to promote a drug for an unapproved use, including in the COVID pandemic situation? Well, here it gets a little bit tricky. Historically, FDA has taking the position that it does have authority over the promotion of off-label uses, but that authority has been challenged and in a number of cases, first in the District Court, then in the Second Circuit, FDA has lost and it's been told they would violate the First Amendment for it to claim a violation of its statute for the promotion of off-label uses. They never push the issue to the U.S. Supreme Court, so it's a bit dicey whether you could promote off-label or not and get away with it
under the Constitution.

Look for this as a future issue that a future Supreme Court might tackle. Well, I hope I've taught you a little bit about the use of drugs off-label and unapproved uses of
drugs for the COVID pandemic. I'm Glenn Cohen and I hope you enjoyed watching this.

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